Would “I” be more risk averse? : the effect of “I” on risk preference

Linguistic elements have been studied quite extensively in behavioural economics as it plays a crucial role in determining economic behaviours. Despite risk preferences being one of the most important components of economic behaviour, little research attention has been done to link linguistic elemen...

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Main Authors: Nishanthi, Nur Fitriah Alias, Chua, Hang Ping
Other Authors: School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66379
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-663792019-12-10T11:23:49Z Would “I” be more risk averse? : the effect of “I” on risk preference Nishanthi Nur Fitriah Alias Chua, Hang Ping School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences Linguistic elements have been studied quite extensively in behavioural economics as it plays a crucial role in determining economic behaviours. Despite risk preferences being one of the most important components of economic behaviour, little research attention has been done to link linguistic elements with risk preferences. Risk preference research is abundant, but, many ignore the possibility that the structure of the sentence itself or the linguistic variables could have a vital role in manipulating and influencing one’s risk preference. This report aims to thus identify how linguistic variables, specifically the use of pronoun could affect individuals’ risk taking behaviour. This was done through an experiment which encompasses two different treatments for the same choices. One treatment consists of a series of 13 decision rows for each of the 12 rounds containing the pronoun “I”, while the second treatment has no pronoun in it. Mann-Whitney U test and regression results showed that subjects who were presented with the pronoun “I” treatment made more safe choices as compared to those in the non-pronoun treatment. The treatment effect may be due to individuals perceiving their connection with the consequences of their decisions in a more profound way. These significant results give a further understanding and enlightenment of how the manipulation of pronoun could have a direct impact on influencing individuals’ risk behaviour. Bachelor of Arts 2016-03-31T03:47:50Z 2016-03-31T03:47:50Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66379 en Nanyang Technological University 45 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences
Nishanthi
Nur Fitriah Alias
Chua, Hang Ping
Would “I” be more risk averse? : the effect of “I” on risk preference
description Linguistic elements have been studied quite extensively in behavioural economics as it plays a crucial role in determining economic behaviours. Despite risk preferences being one of the most important components of economic behaviour, little research attention has been done to link linguistic elements with risk preferences. Risk preference research is abundant, but, many ignore the possibility that the structure of the sentence itself or the linguistic variables could have a vital role in manipulating and influencing one’s risk preference. This report aims to thus identify how linguistic variables, specifically the use of pronoun could affect individuals’ risk taking behaviour. This was done through an experiment which encompasses two different treatments for the same choices. One treatment consists of a series of 13 decision rows for each of the 12 rounds containing the pronoun “I”, while the second treatment has no pronoun in it. Mann-Whitney U test and regression results showed that subjects who were presented with the pronoun “I” treatment made more safe choices as compared to those in the non-pronoun treatment. The treatment effect may be due to individuals perceiving their connection with the consequences of their decisions in a more profound way. These significant results give a further understanding and enlightenment of how the manipulation of pronoun could have a direct impact on influencing individuals’ risk behaviour.
author2 School of Humanities and Social Sciences
author_facet School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Nishanthi
Nur Fitriah Alias
Chua, Hang Ping
format Final Year Project
author Nishanthi
Nur Fitriah Alias
Chua, Hang Ping
author_sort Nishanthi
title Would “I” be more risk averse? : the effect of “I” on risk preference
title_short Would “I” be more risk averse? : the effect of “I” on risk preference
title_full Would “I” be more risk averse? : the effect of “I” on risk preference
title_fullStr Would “I” be more risk averse? : the effect of “I” on risk preference
title_full_unstemmed Would “I” be more risk averse? : the effect of “I” on risk preference
title_sort would “i” be more risk averse? : the effect of “i” on risk preference
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66379
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